University of South Carolina Libraries
*"v ; t ' CHICAGO TO CHARLESTON. Short Route Between These Two Cities Assured. T -? ?. ?v OO T * V?oc ]-\anr\m d W , J UilC ?. O. 1 c uac known here from an official source that the Atlantic Coast Line has entered into a contract with the Norfolk & Western road to connect with the latter road at Roanoke, Va., and thereby establish a short route from Cincinnati, Chicago and the West to Charleston. It is understood that the contract has been signed by both roads and that the Coast Line will soon award contracts for the construction of necessary road links. At present the Coast Line owns a branch road from Wadesboro to Charleston, running through Cheraw. It is said that this :*oad as far as Florence from Wadesboro will be straightened out, the grades reduced and 90 pound rails put down. This road will be extended from Wadesboro to winston-saien. ai Winston-Salem the road will connect with a road now controlled by the ? Norfolk & Western to Roanoke, Va., and at Roanoke the connection will be made with the Norfolk & Western. It is said that the Norfolk & Western road has agreed to route port shipments over the road to Charleston. It is said further that the road will haul the coal from the Pocahontas fields in West Virginia. SOBERED BY BEAX SOUP CURE. _ Sheriff Devises Unique Method of Ridding Jail Boarders. JVC * ' i The "bean soup" remedy introduced by Sheriff William W. Worren as one of his economy and reform! nisTtfi is nnt onlv savins Burlington '? ? * ? w _ eounty, New Jersey, several hundred dollars monthly, but it is making more real converts for temperance than any number of "gold" cures. Criminologists pronounce it a greater success than his "wash and work" edict. Hoboes were the scourge of small towns in the county when Worrell - . went into office. Past conditions at the jail had made it a handy winter retreat, and hither they hied at the first frost, getting committed for some small crime. When Worrell made the tramp prisoners bathe, wash their cells, and do all the work about the jail, there was a bolt to other counties, and a big saving on I the tramp board bill. ; :a When the tramps deserted, the * ?1- I ynsuil ttutu nas 51 v & u vu vuv habitual drunkards, who were sent up so often that the jailers regarded them as steadies. But in addition the sheriff prescribed a daily menu of bean soup for all such prisoners. One experience under the "bean soup'* program, police officials say, ^ is keeping more men sober than the "flag commission," which the recent legislature authorized to publicly blacklist drunkards. Howls of some of the prisoners under the unchanging diet are reach['tug the outer world. Police Captain Shumard received this one, written from jail. It says in part: , "Dear Cap: I am writing to see I: ; if you can't get some of my time taken off. I don't like the bean soup they serve out over here now. They don't even use white beans any more. They make it out of yellow beans. But it's bean soup just the * same, and nothing but bean soup, every day. Damn the beans! "I'm a sobered man now and I can keen sober five months, for if you can get me out I won't come back to beans very soon. "Cap, if you ever did anything for me in your life do it now." f Groom Failed to Appear. Augusta, Ga., June 24.?The failure of the bridegroom to put in an appearance last night caused the indefinite postponement of the wedding of Allen A. Liles and Miss Emma Reynolds. The groom-to-be had left his iancee only a few hours before, apparently well, though showing signs of absentmindedness that was then attributed to the nervousness of the occasion. In the evening the guests had assembled to the number of 200, / and the minister was present, but no jS groom. The party waited a long time while effort was made to find the missing man, but to no avail, and the K wedding was called off. About midnight Liles, in a bedraggled condition, turned up at his apartments. He had been found in a lumber yard, . and had no recollection of what had happened after leaving his fiancee in the afternoon. This morning he is > still suffering from mental trouble, but physicians have pronounced it transitory. Liles is of high standing and has never taken a drink in his life. , _ awnnTft H4Rn.REARTEn GIRL. ?? 1?V:: Virginia Youth Attempts to Kill Lady Who Spurns Him. &?' ' Norfolk, Va., June 24.?William Wallace, aged 21, to-day shot Daisy Holcomb, aged 19 years, to whom he had long been paying court, in Portsmouth. A serious wound was inflicted in the shoulder. Wallace then shot himself in the abdomen. The girl was just leaving the Portsmouth knitting mills for her home. She refused to stop and talk with Wallace and he began shooting. Miss Holcomb is the daughter of W. Holcomb and is expected to recover, TXTollnrtA n Avrr of f Via ITin or'c V> iiilu W QllfliVU) uv ff U L VU^/ XXlJUg) o Daughters hospital, will probably die. KIELLED B*LIGHTNING. Farmer Hit by Bolt Which Strips I Him of Clothing. Valdosta, Ga., June 25.?D. J. Thornton was instantly killed by a Hghtning bolt this afternoon on the 2arm of W. B. Fender, at Mineola. With several others he was at work. When the storm threatened he took refuge under a big tree, taking his team of horses with him. The lightning stripped him of clothing. Both horses were killed also. Mr. Fender was in an automobile a few feet away and was unhurt. 0 | DROWNED IN MOUNTAIN LAKE. \ White Carpenter Loses His Life Near Hendersonville. Heniersonville, X. C.. June 24.? The construction of artificial lakes by building dan.s across the gorges has contributed wonderfully to the beauty and pleasures of this mountain region, but that a lake country has dangers was impressed rather grimly last Saturday by the drown- 1 ng at Kanuga of a white carpenter named Stepp and the efforts, 1 novel in this region, by a diver brought from Norfolk, to recover his body, have further emphasized it. Stepp and two others endeavored to tVio ldlro in n hnfpjiii whirh the vcg VUV iwixv AAA V* - former had built and which was big enough only for one. Consequently the bateau capsized in 30 feet of water. A gasoline launch came to the rescue but Stepp had lost his hold on the overturned boat and had disappeared beneath the water before it arrived The attempt to bring the body to the surface by exploding dynamite proving unsuccessful, a ' diver with his apparatus was telegraphed for and came Tuesday, but > his efforts tailed until this morning, when the body was recovered. The accident created considerable ; excitement and hundreds of people ' visited Lake Kanuga, three miles from Hendersonville, to watch the | operations of the professional diver. Vote With Your Eyes Open. The following editorial from the Beaurort Gazette will be read with < interest in view of the approaching ! lispensary election in this county. ' Mr. Christensen, editor of the Gazette, is State Senator from Beaufort county, and was a membei* of s the investigating committee whose < revelations resulted in the over- 1 throw of the old State dispensary (1 system. We do not know that Mr. Christensen is a prohibitionist, but i certain it is that he is not an advo- 1 cate of the old State dispensary. The ] editorial will well apply to every j county in which an election is to be ] held: 1 "If the voters of this county, after duly weighing the reasons for ' and against, decide to vote for pro- J hibition with a sincere purpose to ; enforce such a law they will thereby : show themselves willing to make a money sacrifice in a great cause. "But they should not delude themselves by any mistaken ideas of the financial consequences of voting out the dispensary. The proceeds of the , dispensary in this county pay about ' one-third of the running expenses of . the county, a large part of the ex- : penses of the towns of Beaufort, Port Royal, Yemasseee, Ridgeland and J from their share of the funds the schools of the county are receiving ' about ten thousand dollars a year. , "If this revenue is withdrawn , there is going to be a very serious ( disarrangement of public finances. In the course of time this problem . of where to get the money would ; work itself out to the advantage of , the whole county under a strictly en- 1 forced prohibition law. But if prohibition is simply going to transfer ; these profits from the sale of liquor ! from " the public treasury to the , pockets of the blind tigers the situation will be deplorable indeed. "We repeat, if the voters, considering all the facts and weighing all ; the possible consequences, decide to < vote in prohibition with the purpose i of enforcing prohibition, and then do i enforce it, the end will be better ] than the beginning; but if they ' blindly vote to overthrow the present 1 order regardless of consequences, or are misled by careless and untrue \ statements into that course, the end 1 may be much worse than present < conditions." < -w 1 HELD ON FRAUD CHARGE. ??_ 1 Young Man of Brevard, N. C., Arrested at Spartanburg. 1 ] Spartanburg, June 25.?A young < man who registered at the Spartan 1 Inn last night as T. R. Wells, Bre- ] vard, N. C., has been arrested on the j charge of working some kind of a 1 flim-flam bank check game in Brevard. It is also stated that he is 1 wanted in Asheville and Greenwood j on similar charges, though he claims that he settled his trouble in Ashe- i ville and Greenwood. Wells had just ; arrived at the hotel and was sitting 1 in front of the hostelry enjoying the < cool mountain breezes when an offi- i cer took charge of him. About ten 1 days ago the hotel received notice s from the Battery Park at Asheville, < to be on the lookout for a man ; named Wells, who had stung the hotel for considerable sums. An of- ] fleer arrived from Brevard to-day 1 and took charge of the young man. j 1 Negro Enters Lady's Room. Aiken, June 25.?Some excite- . ment prevails near Ridge Spring in ] this county. Sheriff Raborn received 1 a telephone message this morning 1 asking him to come at once, as an attempt at criminal assault had been made. The sheriff left at once and ' returned late this afternoon. The j sheriff found that a well known In nf V ? A .vuuiig litu) \jl mat, yiaue iiau awaa.- ; ened during the night to find a negro in her room. The negro placed his hand over her mouth to prevent her crying for help, but, though she succeeded in arousing the family, the negro escaped. Up to this after- < noon the negro had not been captur- i ed. It is not known whether or not i the negro was attempting to commit 1 an assault or was in the act of rob- i bery at the time, and perhaps think- ' ing the young lady awake had placed his hand over her mouth to prevent i her calling help. The negro is de- i scribed as being a dark ginger cake 1 colored boy about 16 years of age, < weighing about 125 pounds, and was ) barefooted, carrying a sack containing his shoes, a hat and cap. The < officers are on the lookout for him. CUTS WIDE SWATH Escaped Convict Swindles Little Town < Charles Harding, alias A. D. Oliver. confidence man, financier and escaped convict, in jail here, is wanted in several States and a legal fight over his disposition is anticipated. His financial deals in this vicinity, covering a period of four months, involve several hundred thousand dol lars. Nearly a dozen banks were caught by worthless checks and many of the most prominent and substantial men of this and surrounding counties were also made victims. Hardin's bride has been served with papers ordering her to produce all diamonds and jewelry her husband gave to her, and it is understood that she' will file suit for divorce. Oliver maintains a stolid silence, but he does not deny that he escaped from the Mississippi penitentiary last December, where he was serving a long sentence for obtaining money under false pretenses. Harding arrived, in Climax last January on a midnight train. He registered as A. D. Oliver at the only hotel in the little town. He remained In the village several days before he i-i J ?? 1 - Degan ms unauciai ueais. Then he purchased the Climax bank, a private institution, giving in payment a check on a bank in New York. He immediately took charge of the bank, retaining Cashier Hall els his assistant. Then he began buying all sorts of property. Secretive About Antecedents. Georgians are usually rather conservative, and they want to know something about the identity and social standing of the man with whom they do business. Questions along this line were propounded to the stranger. "My ancestry does not matter," he said in reply. "This is a business deal, and not a social affair. I will pay for what I get. What more do Fou want? The question of who I am and where I came from is unimportant. This is a case where money talks." This attitude impressed his listenars and the questioning was not pushed. Oliver, as he was known here, refused to say where he came from, but as he used checks on a New York bank and his conversation was filled with casual references to New York men whose names are known everywhere, it was assumed that he came from the metropolis. The stranger became busy at once after buying the Climax bank. Nothing was too big, nothing too little, for his consideration. Whatever he bought he paid fbr, partly in cash and the balance in deposit slips on the Climax bank, or with checks on New York. As the operations became more extended he used checks on the Climax bank, these checks being certified by Cashier Hall. The checks were taken unquestioningly and the country was Booded with them. The signer of the checks was affable and talkative on any subject except his previous history and. ancestry. On these points be continued silent. Apparently he had no existence before the hour when he dropped off the midnight train at Climax. , Wins a Wife. Oliver began paying attention to Miss Rosebud English, the daughter of the landlady of the hotel in Climax. He was an ardent wooer and the young girl was captivated by his polish, his manner and his fabulous wealth. He had bought two automO" biles and he often took her riding. When she accepted his proposal he ?ave her a solitaire diamond ring larger than any ever before seen in Climax. He followed this gift with other diamonds and jewels when they were married, and the wedding was the most brilliant ever seen in that town. No one doubted that Oliver was worth five or ten millions. Only a man of such wealth could have carried out the financial and business ieals he had on hand. He bought the hotel owned by his mother-inlaw, he bought the only lumber yard In Climax and he bought timber and farming lands. When he could not find an industry already in operation that suited tiim he organized one. He extended his operations from Climax. He bought the Bainbridge Lumber Company's plant and he bought banks in various places. In other towns he organized banks, taking most of the stock himself, but finding the money paid in by other stockholders convenient in taking care of such checks as demanded attention. He began the erection of a fine borne for himself and another for his brother-in-law, D. B. Price. They are now nearly finished, work on them having stopped abruptly when the collapse of the house of cards same. The lumber for the house was taken from the lumber yards he had bought and the workmen and contractors were paid with checks on Oliver's bank. He organized the Southern Manufacturing Company at Climax and bought thousands of dollars' worth of machinery. The concern was preparing to go into the cotton manufacturing business on a large scale. He built a new building for his bank stirt stnrtpH P.limflY on a boom that looked like it would make the little town one of the most important in this section of the State. The Bubble Bursts. Then the collapse came. So many of Oliver's checks came to hand that the -convict-financier could not take uare of them. He apparently knew that he had reached the end of his rope, that further "kiting" of checks was impossible. Suspicion was first directed to his shaky financial .condition when he tried to sell his expensive automobiles for a song. He offered cars that :ost him several thousand dollars for a few hundred cash. As matters got further involved Oliver prepared to get away. He went to Climax and got his wife in IN GEORGIA TOWN. ; People Right and Left in of Climax, Cia. an automobile. :ought her through Bainbridge u..J went to Brinson. where he prepared to board a train. He was taken into custody there by L. C. Toole, a merchant, who had several or his checks, and T. H. ourr, a capitalist, who was interested in several of his ventures. He was brought to Bainbridge in his automobile, his wife joking and laughing with his captors, as her faith in the integrity of her husband had not ben shaken. Mrs. Oliver insists now that she never learned anything from her husband regarding his identity or his past; that he never told her where he came from, and that she was content to accept him for what he seemed to be. After Oliver's arrest he insisted that if he were allowed" to go to New York he would be able to raise money to meet all his obligations. He offered to pay the expenses of a guard if permitted to make the journey. At one time it looked as if this offer would be taken and the man permitted to leave the jurisdiction of the Georgia courts. But this proposition provoked such a storm that soon his true status was fixed, and it was seen that he had never had any money; that all his great financial operations had been on credit or on money belonging to others. Identified as a Convict. Then Sheriff Jones, of Aberdeen, Miss., arrived and identified Oliver as UarHinor an ocnanod nrtnvint and further deception was impossible. Soon after Oliver's arrest there was considerable talk of lynching as his dupes began to realize their losses. This feeling of anger was increased when it became known that the city marshal of Climax had known Oliver's prison record since March, and had had a picture sent out by the Mississippi authorities requesting his apprehension. Further details of Oliver's financial transactions are coming in hourly. Banks at Whigham, Quincy, Havana, Pelham, Cairo, Thomasville and other towns have admitted cashing Oliver's checks. The first checks that he drew on a New York bank were protected by checks drawn on the Climax bank and certified by Cashier Hall. Great sympathy is expressed for the young wife. She is not censured for trusting the man who was able 10 deceive tne snrewaest Dusmess men in the community. Her own relatives have suffered heavy financial losses through Oliver's deals. The ex-convict's affairs are in such a tangled condition that it will be weeks before they are straightened out and the full extent of the losses are known.?Bainbridge, Ga., special to Baltimore American. Things Yon Should Know. A mile is 320 rods. A mile is 1,760 yards. A mile is 5,280 feet. A rod is 272% square feet. An acre contains 43,560 square feet. An acre is 2,008% feet square. A ntn.'nkn Ann n A.. n A A pint ui waici wcigus uuc puuuu. A solid. foot contains 7.48 solid pints. , A square foot is 144 square inches. An acre contains 4,840 square yards. A quarter section contains 160 acres. A square yard contains nine square feet. A solid foot contains 1,728 solid inches. A gallon of water holds 231 solid inches. A solid foot .of water weighs 62% pounds. A section contains 640 acres. A bushel (struck) contains 2,150 solid inches. A gallon of milk weighs eight pounds and ten ounces. Hoke Smith Suspends McLendon. Atlanta, Ga., June 24.?Gov. Hoke Smith, who retires from office on Saturday, to-day suspended from office Chairman S. G. McLendon, of the State railroad commission because of Mr. McLendon's recent decision in refusing to order State railroads to reduce rates between Savannah and Atlanta known as the "port rates." A feature of the suspension is that Mr. McLendon was a successor of Joe M. Brown, now governor-elect, I n n ii.1. n ~ 4- . wuu suu<Jt:t;us v*uv. ollulli uu oa.iuiday, and whom Gov. Smith dismissed from his position as railroad commissioner about two years ago. Gov. Smith said that Mr. McLendon was suspended because he was opposing the platform upon which the governor was elected and was pursuing a course which the governor thought detrimental to the interest of the State. He will send a special message to the legislature tomorrow giving the reason for the suspension. The "port rates" controversy was for lower rates on iron and coffee. Several Atlanta firms petitioned for this reduction, claiming that other cities, particularly Nashville, enjoyed lower rates from Georgia ports than did Atlanta. In his opinion deciding against this petition Mr. McLendon said that to grant the lower rates would be equivalent to interfering with interstate commerce, which the State railroad commission had no right to do. Held on Abduction Charge. Spartanburg, June 24.?James Galloway, a young man of the Cherokee Springs section, was committed to jail to-day by Magistrate Kirby on the charge of abduction. It is charged that Galloway on Sunday married a Miss Sheppard, daughter of a farmer of the Cherokee section, and that she was under the age of 16. The ceremony was performed by Notary Public Chapman. if/*-*-.! ^T'"' * SEND YOUR DA CLIFFORD For refined, home life, individual at with cultured teachers, full musical, aca PRICES LOW. _ Numbers limited, cli: able, pure spring water, cold and hot; < sewerage, fine sanitation. Twenty-sixth annual session begins S< apply to Rev. B. O. Cli UNION. | On Top 9 in the estimation of the pub- ^5 0 lie is where your position p will be if driving * S* 1 AN UP-TO-DATE LIVERY _ I RIG = 1 from these stables. Our y turn-outs are always "on 2 top" in the eyes of those . | who know. It's the height j of the driving season. Have j ja$ ns book you for to-morrow. I J. R. KINA |m The Liveryman. r A Grand Opportunity T< I and Alaska-Yukoi i The best and most inexpensive i the Great Western Country this s Yukon Exposition opened June li PAY AS YOU GO, STAY AS LOl DESIRE." Why not spend your your own trip and go in comfort may be done by planning your ti Southern in connection with an individual ] 3rd, on the INDIVIDUAL EXPEI about half as much as a fixed exf * July 3rd Southern Railway?Goldsbcro l Queen & Crescent?Harriman Southern Railway?Danville, K Wabash R. R.?St. Louis to S Union Pacific?Kansas City to [ Denver & Rio Grande?Denver i S. P. L. A. & S. L.?Salt Lake 1 Round Trip R Going via any ticketing route l ticketing route as desired. > Via Portland, Seattle and San 1 1 returning one way via Portland I FROM ^ Goldsboro. $99.75 Greensboro 99.75 Durham 99.75 Spartanburg 97.45 Columbia 98.20 * Orangeburg 98.20 Greenwood 96.65 ' Rock Hill 98.35 * Rates quoted from other points Tickets limited to October 3 [ OVERS at all points west of Chi sale daily to September 29th, : RATES TO and from CALIFORJ fore completing arrangements foi i ity to talk with you about the de and tell you of the most intereu i cheapest way to see them. Writ I Stat? Agents - for Badger* vH|HH Gas and Gasoline JG Engine THIJ THINK MACHIK THEN 1 DENMARK MAC Write them if you want y well, or if you want an esl ^ DENMARl |Hoover*s C I Wo Kpot tn rail VOHP at1 fountain, which we have have also overhauled on made it inviting to the m< We have a well selected 1 Sole agents for the famoi Our Patent Medicines, Dr complete. PRESCRIPTION WO HOOVER'S D ???? f HAS YOUR CHILD A Every child should have an early training in saving w be invaluable in later years, step on the ROAD OF PR( opportunity. Don't wait un START NOW. FOUR PER CEJi ON SAVINGS I. PEOPLES BANK - - UGHXER TO SEMINARY >.v ttention, constant, personal contact idemic, and collegiate courses. I mate uns'.irpassed, building comfortelectric lights, excellent system of ?pten:ber 28, 1909. For catalogue ifford, D. D?, s. c. u I i Bamberg, 8.C^lj| ) See the Pacific Coast 1 n Exposition I , way to see the Pacific Coast and I ammer, and take in the Alaska- I rt, is to "GO AS YOU PLEASE, I ' Wg iQ AS OCTOBER 31st, IP YOU | r own money? Why not plan , and when it suits yon? This ip over the Railway party leaving the Carolinas July S'SE PLAN* which will cost you * tensive excursion tour. I, Route j? to Harriman Junction. 4 Junction to Danville, Ky. [y., to St. Louis, Mo. [ansas City, Mo. Denver. to Salt Lake City. - -'-*1 City to Los Angeles. ailroad Rates selected and returning vi^ any Francisco or vice versa, going or and Seattle. FROM Anderson 96.10 t Raleigh $99.75 Salisbury 99.75 , : ^ iWl Charlotte 99.75 Greenville. ..... 96.05 A Charleston 99.75 \pwhprrv 97.45 . - Chester 98.35 ;'^BBB Sumter 99.75 I on application. >1st, 1909, and permit STOP- I cago or St. Louis. Tickets on fl 1909. LOWER ROUND TRIP I fli quoted on application. Be- fl your trip give us an opportun- fl (tails of it, quote you best rates B * sting points, and the best and I 6 J. C. LUSK, D. P. A., I ^ to SO H. for I every 1 mjT service* I m Write for I booklet. B nk! " A fery repairs shine shine works fl our work done and done timate. ?, S. C. , jg )rug Store1 > tention to our new soda I recently installed. We r entire store and have ost fastidious. 4 -Y'& Line of Valentines. as Huyler's Candies. ng and Sundry lines are I RK A SPECIALTY. RUG STORE ? , tksm. . BANK ACCOUNT? 1 \ . i. The child who receives ill acquire a habit that will 1 Early saving is the first )SPERITY. We offer the til the child is grown but - . ;?v * it. interest. deposits. : - - - Bamberg, S. C. J.